Nine neurodegenerative diseases come from mutated genes expression in which the CAG codon is repeated above a pathological threshold. This is producing mutant proteins, in which are inserted polyglutamine (polyGln) segments, which lose their activity and acquire a new function that is toxic for the neuron. These alterations are related to the peculiar properties of the polyGln. Indeed, these polypeptides have the capacity of autoassemble to form intracellular inclusion bodies. This aggregation tendency of polyGln makes difficult the study of these pathologies. Thus, the use of peptides could constitute an advantageous approach. However, the synthesis of polyGln is associated with numerous deletions and necessitates the addition of charged moieties to achieve purification. Unfortunately, this requirement creates electrostatic interactions that modify the structure and aggregation kinetics of these peptides, in addition to interfering with the evaluation of potential therapeutical agents.
The aim of this project is to develop a system to study polyGln without the charge effects. To do so, two approaches were explored, the first used uncharged polyGln and the second used a polyGln-morpholine structure bearing pH-dependent labile charges. These peptides were produced by solid-support synthesis using a linear and maximal protection approach. Purification was performed by reverse phase high-performance liquid chromatography. These strategies allowed the production of peptides of high purity in good yields. A solubilization procedure combining sonication and lyophilization was developed to study each of these peptides by physicochemical techniques such as light scattering, magnetic resonance, Raman and UV-visible spectroscopies, circular dichroism and polarized optical microscopy.
The uncharged polyGln solubilized in trifluoroethanol-water showed that particle size and aggregation kinetics are proportional to volumetric water fraction. Furthermore, the secondary structure in solution is alpha-predominant and seems rather insensitive to water fraction up to a threshold (25%) above which random coil structure predominates. The analysis of solid-state aggregates showed that helicoidal structures are more abundant than random structures and have the characteristics of amyloid fibrils.
The polyGln-morpholines peptide has a pKa of 7.3 in aqueous media. It is soluble when pH < pKa and at low ionic strength, but it autoassociates when these conditions are not respected. This suggests that electrostatic repulsion is responsible for the stabilization of the peptide in solution. The fractal dimension indicates that the peptide forms compact aggregates whose constituents are 2.5 nm in size, in agreement with compact random coil, beta-hairpin or helicoidal structures. This is in agreement with the results of solution peptide structure studies showing that random coil > beta > alpha. Furthermore, the broadening of 1Hγ NMR signals while the peptide is aggregating suggests an interaction between side-chains. Solid-phase studies showed predominant beta and alpha structures. The aggregation inhibition at pH 8.0 was higher for Congo red than for trehalose, while polyglutamine binding peptide 1 and thioflavine T did not seem to be effective.
These approaches permitted for the first time to overcome the charge effects that were previously inherent to polyGln solution studies and to obtain new information about solubility, structure and aggregation kinetics. Finally, the labile charge groups allow the evaluation of the efficiency of potential therapeutic agents at near physiological pH.